Texas Highway Accident Kills 14

A highway accident just north of Corpus Christi, Texas, left 14 people dead and nine injured when a pickup truck carrying 23 people -- some of them illegal immigrants -- ran off the highway and struck two trees, authorities said.

A white 2000 Ford pickup was heading north on U.S. 59 near the small town of Goliad late Sunday night with 23 people loaded inside the truck's cab and bed when it veered off of the right side of the highway and crashed into two large trees, Gerald Bryant of the Texas Department of Public Safety said.

"This is the most people I've seen in any passenger vehicle, and I've been an officer for 38 years," Bryant told ABC News.

Six of those killed were still inside the truck when emergency crews arrived to find the severely damaged vehicle, Bryant said. Of those who died, 11 were men and three were female.

The Border Patrol is now assisting with the investigation, Bryant said.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Greg Palmore told The Associated Press that the truck was carrying illegal immigrants from Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala.

At least 11 people were air-lifted to several different hospitals, including a Corpus Christi hospital, ABC News affiliate KZTV reported. One person died while being transported to the emergency room.

Many of the passengers were thrown from the truck, with one found about 50 or 60 feet away, and the jaws of life had to be used to get some people out of the truck's cab, according to KZTV.

Men, women and children were reportedly in truck when it crashed. At least two young girls and a young boy are among the dead.